A recent piece about mortgages in the United States contained this paragraph:

The mortgage, the cornerstone of wealth building for generations of Americans, is vanishing. Data from the Mortgage Bankers Association show that Americans are applying for fewer mortgages than they have at any point in the past quarter century, including during the worst of the Great Recession, when the jobless rate was more than twice as high. Since the end of 1999, 96 of the 100 lowest readings of the MBA’s weekly index of new mortgage-loan applications have occurred in the past three years.
These sentences highlight two major changes regarding how Americans view mortgages in the last 80 years (post World War II era):
- The expectation that mortgages are available for everyone. This came about in the postwar era due to changes in mortgage terms as well as interest in homeownership. Regarding terms, mortgages became 30 year obligations, lowering the monthly cost for consumers. Regarding homeownership, pent-up housing needs (Great Depression plus World War II) plus an existing American ideology privileging property ownership led to mortgages used for single-family homes. And with the relative economic prosperity of the postwar era, more Americans than ever could access mortgages. This became the norm: follow the societal paths for success and secure a mortgage as a 20-something or 30-something.
- The expectation that mortgages serve as wealth building instruments. This has increased in recent decades as property values have risen dramatically in many parts of the United States. Prior to this, homeownership or property ownership was its own end. The owner could do what they wanted with the property. They could participate in local community life as a property owner. They could provide for their household. Now people expect to profit in the long-term off their mortgage: they will pay off interest and some equity and then sell it for more money down the road as they pursue their goals.
The hint in the article above is that pursuing and having mortgages has decreased and might decrease in the future. Does this then change perceptions regarding mortgages? Americans have not always viewed mortgages in the same way in the past and may not do so in the future.








